It wasn’t until I bought my first smartphone about two and a half years ago that my enthusiasm for nonfiction books began to wane. I became a news junkie, constantly checking my preferred news outlets for the most up-to-date information. Perhaps to find some relief from the seemingly constant barrage of terrible world news, I started reading Elin Hilderbrand romance novels and learned to appreciate her masterful scandal crafting as well as her picturesque Nantucket backdrops. When I did pick up a nonfiction book, it felt like a slog through each chapter. My attention span actually felt shorter!

With all of that being said, it’s a new year, and I am ready to kick it back into high gear with regard to book consumption by participating in a 2017 Dewey Decimal Challenge. Starting January 2017 and ending in December 2017, I will be reading one nonfiction book per week that represents one of the classifications within the Dewey Decimal System. In total, I’ll be reading fifty-two nonfiction books on a huge range of subjects, and I’ll post my reviews in this blog. Most individuals only venture into the nonfiction section when they are looking for information–few think of it as a leisure reading section (Ed. note: I read nonfiction for leisure! -kw). My goal is to showcase the library’s nonfiction collection in a new and exciting way and, hopefully, help you find some titles to read purely for enjoyment.

If you are unfamiliar with the Dewey Decimal System, a nonfiction classification system used by public libraries around the world, fret not! The System groups subjects, keeps similar books together, and aids in browsing. Numbers are used to represent different subjects within the nonfiction collection. There are ten main classifications (with many more subcategories!). You can check out an overview on Wikipedia at this link. I will select five books to read over the course of five weeks from each of the ten broad Dewey classifications. This will equate to a total of 50 books with the remaining two books selected at random.

For our first five weeks, we will be hanging out in the 000 Generalities classification. The 000s include the following subcategories:

My first book choice for the challenge was a no-brainer for me as I have always been fascinated by the idea of flying saucers and Martians. I remember reading Whitley Strieber’s Communion: A True Story as a young teen and being so terrified that I would hide the book in another room before going to bed. Talk about the power of language! The cover of that book still gives me the heebie jeebies to this day. As I got older, I sought out less sensational accounts of extraterrestrial visitation. And, while I cannot say that I wholeheartedly believe that we are being visited by alien life forms, I will say that I find accounts of UFO sightings from military personnel to be thought-provoking and sometimes deeply unsettling.

In Encounter in Rendlesham Forest, Nick Pope, a retired member of Britain’s Ministry of Defence and former member of the MoD’s section of Secretariat whose duties included investigating reports of UFO sightings, examines a famous series of UFO sightings that occurred in Rendlesham Forest in Suffolk, England, in late December 1980. He is aided in his examination by John Burroughs and Jim Penniston, two retired United States Air Force personnel who were stationed at the US Air Force base adjacent to Rendlesham Forest when the incident took place. Both men claim to have had a close encounter with a UFO in the forest on the night of December 26, 1980, while investigating a report from a security patrol of lights descending into the area. Physical evidence, including indentations in the earth, tree damage, as well as abnormal levels of radiation, was found at the scene. Over the course of three nights, December 26 through December 28, dozens of military personnel, including high ranking officers, witnessed strange phenomena not limited to lights in the distance but actual beams of light descending from the sky at close range. Encounter in Rendlesham Forest includes first-hand accounts from key witnesses; a detailed timeline of each night’s events; the procedures followed (or in many instances NOT followed) by the US Air Force and the Royal Air Force with regard to the incident; exploration of theories put forth by ufologists as well as the media following the incident; examination of accusations of a cover-up; as well as brief mentions of other UFO sightings that Pope believes are of significance with regard to military defense.

While I did not find this book enjoyable due to Pope’s writing style, which, at moments, seems like the ramblings of a fanatic after one too many cups of coffee, along with his habit of condemning speculation while being prone to speculation himself, I was interested in his insider knowledge with regard to how governments dodge UFO-related inquiries from the public, which includes commissioning investigators from the private sector in order to avoid having to release information made accessible by the Freedom of Information Act. In addition, Pope devotes one chapter to Project Condign, the result of which was an extraordinary document titled “Unidentified Aerial Phenomena in the UK Air Defence Region“. This document is a compilation and analysis of data drawn from approximately 10,000 UFO sightings and reports gathered by a section of the Directorate of Scientific and Technical Intelligence within the Defence Intelligence Staff whose parent organization is the Ministry of Defence. According to Pope, not only does this document acknowledge the existence of UFOs, but it addresses the race between governments to harness observed UFO technology for use as a weapon.

Ultimately, Pope provides the reader with some very compelling material but in a way that is, unfortunately, barely coherent at points. I would not recommend this book, but, if you are interested in reading first-hand accounts of UFOs from reputable sources, I would enthusiastically recommend Leslie Kean’s UFOs: Generals, Pilots, and Government Officials Go on the Record. Interestingly, Kean’s view on UFOs is conservative in that she insists that acceptance of the existence of UFOs does not mean acceptance of the existence of extraterrestrial life. Who knows what else they might be!

[…] the history of news broadcasting on TV, and I am barely familiar with the current climate. In a previous post I mentioned my unquenchable thirst for information on current events, but, like many people, I get […]

[…] the history of news broadcasting on TV, and I am barely familiar with the current climate. In a previous post I mentioned my unquenchable thirst for information on current events, but, like many people, I get […]